Science and Research

Period of hospitalization and mortality in transferred versus non-transferred COVID-19 patients: results from Germany

COVID-19 was a challenge for health-care systems worldwide, causing large numbers of hospitalizations and inter-hospital transfers. We studied whether transfer, as well as its reason, was associated with the duration of hospitalization in non-ICU and ICU patients. For this purpose, all patients hospitalized due to COVID-19 between August 1st and December 31st, 2021, in a network of hospitals in Southern Germany were comprehensively characterized regarding their clinical course, therapy, complications, transfers, reasons for transfer, involved levels of care, total period of hospitalization and in-hospital mortality, using univariate and multiple regression analyses. While mortality was not significantly associated with transfer, the period of hospitalization was. In non-ICU patients (n = 545), median (quartiles) time was 7.0 (4.0-11.0) in non-transferred (n = 458) and 18.0 (11.0-29.0) days in transferred (n = 87) patients (p < 0.001). In ICU patients (n = 100 transferred, n = 115 non-transferred) it was 12.0 (8.3-18.0) and 22.0 (15.0-34.0) days (p < 0.001). Beyond ECMO therapy (4.5%), reasons for transfer were medical (33.2%) or capacity (61.9%) reasons, with medical/capacity reasons in 32/49 of non-ICU and 21/74 of ICU patients. Thus, the transfer of COVID-19 patients between hospitals was associated with longer periods of hospitalization, corresponding to greater health care utilization, for which specific patient characteristics and clinical decisions played a role.

  • Suski, P.
  • Jörres, R. A.
  • Engelhardt, S.
  • Kahnert, K.
  • Lenherr, K.
  • Bauer, A.
  • Budweiser, S.

Keywords

  • Humans
  • *Patient Transfer
  • *COVID-19/epidemiology/therapy
  • Hospitalization
  • Hospital Mortality
  • Regression Analysis
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Intensive Care Units
Publication details
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-57272-y
Journal: Sci Rep
Pages: 7338 
Number: 1
Work Type: Original
Location: CPC-M
Disease Area: PALI
Partner / Member: KUM
Access-Number: 38538711

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